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- Slavery_in_Cuba abstract "Slavery in Cuba was associated with the sugar cane plantations and existed on the territory of the island of Cuba from the 16th century until it was abolished by royal decree on October 7, 1886. More than a million African slaves were brought to Cuba as part of the Atlantic slave trade; Cuba did not end its participation in the slave trade until 1867. As the slaves outnumbered the European Cubans, a large proportion of Cubans are descended from these African slaves, perhaps as many as 60% of the population. Slavery in Cuba was particularly profitable for its slave owners after the Haitian Revolution; after 1804 the newly independent state of Haiti retreated from the global sugar market as its residents chose to focus on subsistence farming, and Cuba took its place as the largest sugar producer. By the mid-19th century, due to the British pressure to abolish slavery, plantation owners transported more than 100,000 Chinese workers. But they were held in conditions not very different from the ones of the African slaves.".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageID "41550104".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageLength "13931".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageRevisionID "621414043".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Atlantic_slave_trade.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Barracoon.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Barracoons.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Havana_(1762).
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Slavery_by_country.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Slavery_in_the_Caribbean.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Category:Spanish_colonial_period_of_Cuba.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Cuba.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Flagellation.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Free_people_of_color.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Freedman.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Freedmen.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink French_Revolution.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink George_Keppel,_3rd_Earl_of_Albemarle.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Haiti.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Haitian_Revolution.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Harlem_Renaissance.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Havana.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Hispaniola.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink José_Antonio_Aponte.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Julian_de_Arriaga.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Lydia_Cabrera.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Mulatto.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Nicolás_Guillén.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Saint-Domingue.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Seven_Years_War.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink University_of_North_Carolina_Press.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Work_hours.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLink Working_time.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLinkText "African slaves".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLinkText "Slavery in Cuba".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLinkText "practiced in Cuba".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageWikiLinkText "slavery in Cuba".
- Slavery_in_Cuba align "center".
- Slavery_in_Cuba hasPhotoCollection Slavery_in_Cuba.
- Slavery_in_Cuba quote "El negro junto al cañaveral. El yanqui sobre el cañaveral. La tierra bajo el cañaveral. ¡Sangre que se nos va!".
- Slavery_in_Cuba quote "“In the long run, Santiago de Cuba proved to be a receptive landing point for men and women who hoped to restore the social relations of slavery, and for their project of redefining others among the refugees as slaves. Authorized since 1789 as a port of arrival for the transatlantic trade in African captives, Santiago served an expanding hinterland of plantations producing sugar and coffee. Ships arrived regularly from the west coast of Africa, delivering bound laborers into the urban and rural economy. Men and women from Saint-Domingue [Haiti] who brought with them both financial resources and the habit of command could make a convincing case that they – and their ‘slaves’ – offered something of value to a developing agricultural export sector. Those with more-modest resources, including men and women designated as mulatos or mulatas libres, could simply point out that they needed the labor of one or two slaves in order to avoid becoming a charge on the Cuban government.”".
- Slavery_in_Cuba quote "“So the place swarmed with fleas and ticks that gave the entire work force infections and diseases”".
- Slavery_in_Cuba salign "center".
- Slavery_in_Cuba source "Biography of a Runaway Slave, page 23".
- Slavery_in_Cuba source "Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation, page 52".
- Slavery_in_Cuba source "~Nicolás Guillén The Negro bound to the canefield. The Yankee above the canefield. The earth beneath the canefield. Blood seeps out of us!".
- Slavery_in_Cuba title "Caña".
- Slavery_in_Cuba width "50.0".
- Slavery_in_Cuba width "75.0".
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote_box.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Slavery.
- Slavery_in_Cuba subject Category:Slavery_by_country.
- Slavery_in_Cuba subject Category:Slavery_in_the_Caribbean.
- Slavery_in_Cuba subject Category:Spanish_colonial_period_of_Cuba.
- Slavery_in_Cuba comment "Slavery in Cuba was associated with the sugar cane plantations and existed on the territory of the island of Cuba from the 16th century until it was abolished by royal decree on October 7, 1886. More than a million African slaves were brought to Cuba as part of the Atlantic slave trade; Cuba did not end its participation in the slave trade until 1867.".
- Slavery_in_Cuba label "Slavery in Cuba".
- Slavery_in_Cuba sameAs Sklaverei_in_Kuba.
- Slavery_in_Cuba sameAs m.0_1g_3j.
- Slavery_in_Cuba sameAs Q2292671.
- Slavery_in_Cuba sameAs Q2292671.
- Slavery_in_Cuba wasDerivedFrom Slavery_in_Cuba?oldid=621414043.
- Slavery_in_Cuba isPrimaryTopicOf Slavery_in_Cuba.